“The residents of Nunavut and the people who wish to do business in Nunavut are casualties”

NUNATSIAQ NEWS

Caribou migrating through the Kivalliq region near Rankin Inlet. The Nunavut Planning Commission's draft land use plan for Nunavut would ban mining and other industrial areas in about 80 per cent of Nunavut's caribou calving and post-calving areas. But in calving and post-calving areas with high mineral potential, mining would be allowed subject to certain conditions, under the "Special Management Area" designation. (FILE PHOTO)

Following a protracted dispute, the Nunavut Planning Commission filed a lawsuit in Federal Court Aug. 18 against the Government of Canada, alleging broken promises and political interference on the part of federal government officials.

The legal action flows from Ottawa’s refusal to fund a $1.7 million public hearing required to complete the approval of the NPC’s final draft Nunavut land use plan.

“The residents of Nunavut and the people who wish to do business in Nunavut are casualties in this dispute,” the NPC said in a news release issued late in the day Aug. 18.

In addition to the public hearing funding issue, the NPC also accuses federal cabinet ministers and bureaucrats at Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada of broken promises and political interference, its news release said.

They also said the NPC is supposed to be an independent regulator at arms-length from government, but that Ottawa has used its funding power to compromise the commission’s “independent integrity.”

And the NPC said it plans to file more court actions later this month, related to proposals that “mysteriously disappeared as part of an ill-conceived negotiation strategy.”

The commission said that in May 2013, Ottawa imposed a two-year deadline on the NPC for completion of the land use plan.

But they now say the federal government “denies the deadline in spite of clear correspondence to the contrary.”

“Court documents and evidence to be led will show that this came about by way of political interference by federal ministers in the re-appointment of the NPC chair, at the time,” the commission said

And they say they will introduce court documents and other evidence to prove this point.

The plan, if approved, would set out legally binding rules stating which pieces of land in Nunavut may be used for what purpose, including lands that would be protected from development and lands where development would be allowed.

“The objective of the land use plan is to guide and direct resource use and development while providing for the existing and future well-being of the residents and communities that rely on the Nunavut Settlement Area and outer land fast ice zone,” the NPC said.

In it, mining and other industrial activities are banned from about 15 per cent of Nunavut’s land base, including critical caribou calving areas.

The draft plan, which covers about two million square kilometres of territory, takes in an area bigger than any land use plan anywhere else in the world.

“If Nunavut were its own country it would be the 14th largest in the world,” the NPC said in its Aug. 18 news release.

The commission began work on the plan in November 2007, with a budget of about $3 million a year.

After more than 60 meetings and numerous workshops, only a final public hearing is required before the Nunavut land use planning process can be completed, the NPC said.

But now, that might not happen until the commissions legal actions are resolved.

“Apparently, the citizens of Nunavut will wait until a court requires the funding of $1.7 million for the Nunavut Land Use Plan since the federal government refuses to fund or even go to the arbitration clause provided in the NLCA [Nunavut Land Claims Agreement], the commission said.